rvallee
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Uhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh.... no. Just. No.Healthcare providers in both samples were aware of CFS and exhibited a high level of knowledge.
Uhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh.... no. Just. No.Healthcare providers in both samples were aware of CFS and exhibited a high level of knowledge.
If that is the case, how can it be solved?. If it is some tragic combination of genetics, birth defects, hormones, environment, toxicity, stress, etc etc, all these variations will be different in each person.
This is all getting very dark.
Uhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh.... no. Just. No.
Yes, totally right, @rvallee!
One of the authors of this study might ring a bell. As I understand it, this author viewed ME as a psychological condition, and headed the CDC dept. in charge of ME for a time.
After reading and reflecting on this thread, the obvious unarticulated questions are: and how many more decades will it take to arrive at something meaningful, if these are the results in 20 or 30 years? will it even be in my lifetime? perhaps another 50 years? perhaps more? perhaps it is only in a distant future that the young people will get help? How many generations will be lost at the rate things are going?
John Keats' parents were dead by the time he was diagnosed, and fortunately were spared watching him die but they were not there to assist him either. I think about him non stop. Look how long it took-- (after his death in 1821) to come up with a TB vaccine (developed in the 1920s)--and the first vaccinations took place decades later in the post war period in the 1950s. This all adds up to 130 years between his death and treatment.
If we have, as it is indicated here, not much progress in 30 years, this means decades upon decades to go. Someone, please tell me that I have it all wrong.
PS: and please let us not say that this illness does not bring death: it brings a living death, for that is what lying in a bed for years is.
That has pretty much been Dr. Komaroff’s message for the past 30 years. I remember back in the ‘90s when he delivered that message to 1/4 of the clinicians in California at once. Still hanging in to get the message out.
Thank you dear Doka Girl for your encouraging words. Thank you. The treatments have all been tried on our end; and they are not really effective. They spike the system, which then crashes horrifically. Or there are intolerances to so many meds amongst PWME. But your kind words have touched me.@Perrier and @Peter
Several years ago, I was told by a medical professional with very little knowledge of ME, there would never be a treatment in my life time. Not an uplifting thing to say, and incorrect, as there are some treatments, as listed in physicians' manuals. Not THE treatment we wish to see but some.
We are fighting complex multiple battles: the stigma, lack of treatment, and little to no medical education.
In all these battles we are making progress. In the past 5 years, more scientists, and other academics have gotten on board. Private funding and even government funding is increasing. Advocacy/activist groups have strengthened, and new ones have emerged. We have more media outreach about ME - films, podcasts, forums, blogs etc.
All this and more encourages me. I am of course hoping for an effective treatment in
my lifetime. Sooner, rather than later.
Overall, momentum is gaining. I'm as disappointed as anyone when we are pushed back, but I think overall, there is
progress on some important fronts. I hope we see improvements accelerate very soon.
I heard (from where I cannot recall, just that it was indirect, but from a source I deemed credible for this type of information) that researchers who submitted papers there got rejection notices saying that NEJM didn't publish on the topic of CFS.Tell us what you know about that. The forbidding, that is. We keep learning new things. Everything has a cause.
But worst of all: I do not see any time line. In other fields, folks work with time lines, or certainly try to. I guess, I will be told, research doesn't work that way.
With just above it a "trending" Exercise Therapy May Benefit Chronic Fatigue.Dr. Komaroff's online article in JAMA currently has about31,000views. https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2737854
Dr. Komaroff's online article in JAMA currently has about 35,000 views.
There's a thing that's a strategic disease plan. NIH writes these for other diseases. We should lobby for one. Some of them have benchmarks by timeframe.
There's a thing that's a strategic disease plan. NIH writes these for other diseases. We should lobby for one. Some of them have benchmarks by timeframe.
Mod note: Part of post moved to new thread.
I may have repeated this about a dozen times or so throughout my comments. Hopefully the message gets across.fwiw - As part of the RFI responses to NIH this year I (and likely others also) stressed the need for a strategic plan.